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Children who are confirmed by child protective services as victims of maltreatment who received post-investigation services (Percent) – 2011

Data Provided by: National KIDS COUNT Program
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Scale: 23% - 100%
Scale
United States 51%
Alabama 51% Barchart image
Alaska 35% Barchart image
Arizona 99% Barchart image
Arkansas 82% Barchart image
California 84% Barchart image
Colorado 27% Barchart image
Connecticut N.A.
Delaware 40% Barchart image
Florida 23% Barchart image
Georgia N.A.
Hawaii 67% Barchart image
Idaho 81% Barchart image
Illinois 45% Barchart image
Indiana 42% Barchart image
Iowa 100% Barchart image
Kansas 57% Barchart image
Kentucky 92% Barchart image
Louisiana 56% Barchart image
Maine 26% Barchart image
Maryland 35% Barchart image
Massachusetts 87% Barchart image
Michigan 65% Barchart image
Minnesota 68% Barchart image
Mississippi 48% Barchart image
Missouri 73% Barchart image
Montana 60% Barchart image
Nebraska 51% Barchart image
Nevada 65% Barchart image
New Hampshire 100% Barchart image
New Jersey 70% Barchart image
New Mexico 38% Barchart image
New York N.A.
North Carolina N.A.
North Dakota 71% Barchart image
Ohio 44% Barchart image
Oklahoma 85% Barchart image
Oregon N.A.
Pennsylvania N.A.
Rhode Island 42% Barchart image
South Carolina 98% Barchart image
South Dakota 46% Barchart image
Tennessee 100% Barchart image
Texas 56% Barchart image
Utah 92% Barchart image
Vermont 34% Barchart image
Virginia 51% Barchart image
Washington 50% Barchart image
West Virginia 86% Barchart image
Wisconsin 60% Barchart image
Wyoming 68% Barchart image
District of Columbia 21%
Puerto Rico 68%
Virgin Islands N.A.

Definitions: Victimized children include those who are the subject of at least one substantiated or indicated maltreatment report, and/or who were identified as alternative response victims. Rates of maltreated children are per 1,000 children less than 18 years old. It is important to note that the numbers presented here cannot include victimized children who have never been made known to the system through a maltreatment report. Because of this, and because of state differences in policies and practices—including variations in the legal definitions of maltreatment—readers should exercise caution in interpreting trends and in making state-by-state comparisons.

To the extent possible, we use the same definition of substantiation as the Child Maltreatment report. Unlike many of the tabulations in Child Maltreatment our analyses examined the number of children who were maltreated, not the number of maltreatment incidents. Since a child can be the subject of more than one maltreatment incident, the numbers of children in each category presented here will be smaller than Child Maltreatment’s tabulations pertaining to numbers of incidents. Cases of maltreatment where the victim was not yet born, or was more than 17 years old are not included.  State estimates are shown only for states with valid data. The state is suppressed on records for fatalities on the publicly-available NCANDS file in order to protect confidentiality. Of all the fatalities, some had prior investigations (in the same fiscal year) for maltreatment reports and others did not.  Prior to 2010, fatalities were included in our National totals. Beginning in 2010, our national total includes the fatalities if they also had a prior investigation report which was not associated with a fatality, but otherwise fatalities are excluded. We made this exclusion because it is not possible on the public-use file to identify which of the children who died also have a record indicating a prior maltreatment investigation, and because we found that National totals are closer to Child Maltreatment published estimates with this approach (i.e., national estimates are overestimated to a greater degree when fatalities are included than the degree to which they are underestimated if fatalities are excluded).  Due to missing state data, National totals are not provided before 2004. National estimates include Puerto Rico after 2005.

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Data Source: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families, Administration on Children, Youth and Families, Children’s Bureau.  National Child Abuse and Neglect Data System (NCANDS) Child File, FFY 2000–2011. NCANDS data used with permission from Cornell University’s National Data Archive on Child Abuse and Neglect website, http://www.ndacan.cornell.edu.  The collector of the original data, the funding agency, NDACAN, Cornell University, and the agents or employees of these institutions bear no responsibility for the analyses or interpretations presented here. More...

Footnotes: Updated May 2013.
N.A. – Data not available.

Note: The District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands are not included in maps and rankings because they are not states and therefore comparisons on many indicators of child well being are not meaningful.

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701 St. Paul Street
Baltimore, MD 21202

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http://www.kidscount.org

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